Lamido Sanusi Business News

Nigeria Imposes Tenure Limit on Bank CEOs: UBA’s Tony Elumelu and Zenith’s Jim Ovia Out

Tony Elumelu, Outgoing MD/CEO, United Bank for Africa (UBA)

Tony Elumelu, Outgoing MD/CEO, United Bank for Africa (UBA)

Two of Nigeria’s most prominent bank chief executives are to be forced to stand down under new rules introduced by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) as part of the governor’s ongoing tussle with some of the country’s most powerful tycoons.

Lamido Sanusi, who took over as CBN Governor in June, has already rocked the financial sector in Africa’s second largest economy, dismissing the executives of eight banks during a debt crisis brought on by reckless lending. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) bailed out stricken banks to the tune of $4 billion.

In the latest move, the country’s 24 banks have been instructed to place a 10-year limit on the tenures of chief executives. “All CEOs who would have served for 10 years by July 31, 2010 shall cease to function in that capacity and shall hand over to their successors,” the CBN said.

Jim Ovia, Outgoing MD/CEO, Zenith Bank

Jim Ovia, Outgoing MD/CEO, Zenith Bank

The purpose of the new rules was to address “corporate governance issues”, the CBN said.

Three chief executives would be affected, including the heavyweights who run two of the continent’s largest banks, people familiar with the situation said.

One is Tony Elumelu, who emerged as chief executive at United Bank for Africa (UBA) following a power struggle that followed its 2005 merger with Standard Trust Bank, which he had run since 1997. UBA’s board has just appointed Phillips Oduoza as the MD/CEO designate to replace Tony Elumelu.

UBA says it has assets of more than $19 billion, seven million customers in 14 African countries, and offices in New York, Paris and London. In 2008, US regulators fined UBA $15 million for failing to implement an adequate anti-money laundering program. The bank has since appointed new risk managers. Read the rest of this entry »

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Layoffs for Christmas? Nigeria’s Banks to Sack 5,000 This Week; Massive Retrenchments Continue in the Nigerian Banking Sector

LayoffsThere are strong indications that the on-going wind of massive job cuts in banks will blow unabated before the end of the year.

Investigations by the Nigerian Tribune indicated that apart from the two banks that sacked over 4,000 workers over the weekend, four banks have also concluded plans to distribute sack letters today.

Nigerian Tribune learnt that two of the four banks fall in the category of those declared safe and sound by the recent special audit instituted by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC). Read the rest of this entry »

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VIDEO: Health of the Nigerian Market + Stanbic IBTC to Set Up Two New Fixed Income Funds in Nigeria: CNBC Africa Interview with Shuaib Audu, Head, Investment Management, Stanbic IBTC

The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) has been underperforming despite the recent intervention by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

There are also plans by the CBN to set up an asset management company (AMC) to help with toxic loans with the banks. See recent interview with CBN Governor Lamido Sanusi regarding AMC.

Stanbic IBTC’s two new fixed income funds are the Stanbic IBTC Money Market Fund and the Stanbic IBTC Bond Fund.

Read more on Banking in Nigeria

Stanbic IBTC Asset Management

Source(s): CNBC Africa

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Central Bank of Nigeria’s Governor Lamido Sanusi: A Radical in a Conservative’s Job?

Lamido Sanusi, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria

Lamido Sanusi, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria

Lamido Sanusi is a very brilliant man. He writes the English language with remarkable authority, and even speaks it better.

This could however be both an asset and a liability. Too much love of ‘grammar’ could lead to an undue love for the podium and limelight, with attendant risks of gaffes in moments of rhetorical flourishes.

Central Bank Governors are thought to possess so much crucial information about their country’s economy that investors and analysts closely monitor their utterances even after they have left office. For instance, when Alan Greenspan, who retired as Chairman of the US Federal Reserve on January 31, 2006, predicted on February 26, 2007 that the US would enter into recession before or in early 2008, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped by 416 points (or 3.3% of its value) the following day. At that time, it was the worst one-day loss since September 17, 2001, when it lost 684 points (7.1%) after reopening in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Read the rest of this entry »

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Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Asset Management Company (AMC): Next Big Player in Nigeria’s Banking Sector, Says Lamido Sanusi

Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, has taken a tough line with the banks

Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, has taken a tough line with the banks

An Asset Management Company (AMC), to be floated soon by the Central Bank of Nigeria, is going to be the next big player in the regulation of the nation’s financial system.

The past five months since the appointment of Lamido Sanusi as CBN governor were dominated by the apex bank’s whirlwind intervention in nine banks, which saw the chief executive officers of those banks sacked and being prosecuted on sundry charges by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

The AMC is Sanusi’s next move as he presses forward after the action described as the “Sanusi Tsunami.”

In an interview with a group of Nigerian journalists at the 13th Standard Bank Africa Forum, which ended in Cape Town, South Africa, last month, Sanusi explained that the AMC initiative is being currently articulated in the apex bank, which will subsequently seek approval for it from the National Assembly.

He said the AMC will serve both the banks and the stock market.

Explaining exactly what the company would be doing, the governor said its focus would first be on the marginal loans given by those banks that were badly hit by the capital market crash, because those are easier to value. Read the rest of this entry »

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VIDEO: CNBC Africa Interview with Lamido Sanusi, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN): Local and Foreign Potential Buyers of Nigerian Banks; CBN’s Asset Management Company (AMC) to Take Over Banks’ Toxic Debt

Watch more video interviews of Lamido Sanusi

Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)

Source(s): CNBC Africa

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Nigeria’s Biggest Banks to Extend Market Lead, Renaissance Capital (RenCap) Says; 2nd Wave of Banking Consolidation Eminent

Renaissance Capital PartnersNigeria’s four largest banks will boost their domestic market share, leaving smaller rivals behind, following an audit by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) of lenders operating in the country, Renaissance Capital (RenCap) said.

First Bank of Nigeria Plc, Zenith Bank Ltd., United Bank for Africa Plc (UBA) and Guaranty Trust Bank Plc (GTBank) may emerge from the crisis with a combined 54% market share “over the next couple of years” from 35%, Kato Mukuru, RenCap’s Lagos-based Banking Analyst, said in a note to clients. Read the rest of this entry »

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Nigeria to Limit Domestic Banks’ Market Share to 20%

Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, has taken a tough line with the banks

Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, has taken a tough line with the banks

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will limit domestic banks’ market share to 20% and prevent the country’s biggest lenders from acquiring stakes in 10 institutions that failed an audit earlier this year, the CBN’s Governor Lamido Sanusi said.

The Central Bank of Nigeria would also prefer that any foreign bank planning to acquire a stake in a Nigerian bank be willing to share ownership with Nigerians and not demand 100% of the entity, Lamido Sanusi said in an interview published recently.

The Central Bank of Nigeria conducted audits of Nigeria’s 24 banks this year that were aimed at stabilizing an industry reeling from bad debts. Sanusi fired the chief executive officers of eight lenders and injected at least N620 billion ($4.12 billion) into those and two other banks to boost their capital and liquidity.

A first audit in August resulted in the sacking of the CEOs of the following banks: Afribank Nigeria Plc, Finbank Plc, Intercontinental Bank Plc, Oceanic Bank International Plc, and Union Bank Nigeria Plc.

In October, the CEOs of Bank PHB Plc, Spring Bank Plc and Equitorial Trust Bank Ltd. were dismissed, while Wema Bank Plc and Unity Bank Plc retained their management and received capital injection. Read the rest of this entry »

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What’s Next for Nigeria’s Banks?

The Central Bank of Nigeria has an important role to play in efficiently regulating Nigeria's banking sector.

The Central Bank of Nigeria has an important role to play in efficiently regulating Nigeria's banking sector.

Since the audit results of the remaining 14 Nigerian banks was announced earlier in the month, there has been much speculation about foreign take-overs of the troubled institutions, as well as mergers within the sector. Going forward, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will also have to actively manage the financial health of the banks and make sure they don’t find themselves in such a situation again.

After the audit findings on the first 10 of Nigeria’s 24 banks were revealed in the middle of August, the market has been holding its breath for the results of the 14 remaining banks.

On 2 October, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) announced that four more banks – Bank PHB, Equitorial Trust Bank (ETB), Spring Bank, and Wema Bank – were undercapitalized, in a poor liquidity position, and in what the CBN called a “grave situation”. A fifth bank – Unity Bank – was adjudged to have insufficient capital but a healthy liquidity position.

The CBN said it will inject N200 billion (US$1.3 billion) into the four distressed banks to stabilize them. This is in addition to the N420 billion ($2.8 billion) released to the five banks – Oceanic Bank, Intercontinental Bank, AfriBank, Finbank and Union Bank – found to be in trouble after the first round of audits. The managing directors and executive directors of Spring Bank, Equitorial Trust Bank (ETB), and Bank PHB have also been removed. Read the rest of this entry »

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Nigeria’s Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, on Central Bank of Nigeria’s Debtor List

Atiku Abubakar is on the list with 600 other wealthy Nigerians

Atiku Abubakar is on the list with 600 other wealthy Nigerians

Nigeria’s former vice-president and opposition leader Atiku Abubakar is included in a list of major bank debtors released by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

This list says Atiku Abubakar owes N111 million ($730,000; £450,000) and names 600 others who owe a total of $2.5 billion.

The non-repaying of these debts is a major factor in the recent government takeover of several banks.

The scale of the debt has created a scandal in Nigeria. The latest move by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) marks the end of its forensic audit of Nigeria’s 24 financial institutions.

The scandal emerged in August as the government stepped in to take control of five banks – sacking their management teams.

Four chief executives were arrested – they are now being prosecuted on multiple fraud charges.

A fifth chief executive, Erastus Akingbola, former CEO of Intercontinental Bank, is on the run – he is thought to be in the UK.

The list of debtors to Bank PHB, Equitorial Trust Bank, Spring Bank, Wema Bank, and Unity Bank was made available on Wednesday evening.

Other powerful people on the list include: Read the rest of this entry »

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